The 34-year-old actress said that she gets bored with her hairstyle easily and is debating whether she should chop her long locks off into a fashionable pixie cut, reported Contactmusic.

"At some point I might just want to chop it all off and go really short. I'll just wake up in the morning and, well ... you know," she said.

"If I want to chop off my hair, I'll take scissors and do one side before I even go to the hairdresser. It's all about trusting my instincts. Plus, that way I can't change my mind," Saldana said.

The star also revealed she is keen to give her hair a break by letting it revert to its natural Afro style.

"It's been eight months since my last straightening treatment, and I'm going to let it all grow. It's been a long time since I've woken up with my hair looking like an Afro. I can't wait to have that again," she said.

Did Hayden Panettiere go under the knife?

Hayden Panettiere, who was seen sporting a bikini body while frolicking on Miami Beach during her 2013 Easter vacation, also showed off what seemed to be a modest breast enlargement.

Rumours had swirled in 2010 that the 23-year-old actress, who is dating heavyweight boxing world-champion Wladimir Klitschko, had gotten breast implants, though they were never confirmed, the New York Daily News reported.

But her new photographs showed a small indentation on her chest, suggesting that implants may have caused her skin to stretch.

In a 2009 beach photo, Panettiere had a noticeably smaller chest and by speculation, she may have gone up only one or two cup sizes.

Models eat tissues to stay skinny!

Kirstie Clements, who was fired from her job as editor-in-chief of Vogue Australia last year has released a book, in which she has exposed the dark side of the fashion publishing industry.

In her book, The Vogue Factor, she has detailed disturbing methods fashion models use to maintain their shape — from starving models on IV drips to photoshopping models to "get rid of bones" and make them appear healthier.

Clements told Entertainment Tonight that some models even eat tissue to stay thin, even though they swell in the stomach.

Clements told the channel that while most people accuse editors of photoshopping images for the girls to look slimmer, on occasion, things used to turn the other way around.

Clements' sudden departure from Vogue last year, after 10 years of leading the magazine, was part of a "cultural change" at the company. She was replaced by former Harper's Bazaar editor Edwina McCann.

In the book, she discusses how eating disorders are rampant in modeling, but how editors never know what's really going on with the models they work with.

"That's the insidious part of eating disorders," Clements told ET.

Clements insists that the book is "larger than just skinny models."

"(It) has a lot of truths about what happens in fashion publishing," she said. "It's an honest account of what goes on."

Brooklyn Decker bowled over by Jennifer Aniston's flawless body

Brooklyn Decker has admitted that she feels so intimidated by Jennifer Aniston's stunning body that she would like to have her as a body double.

The Victoria's Secret model revealed in an interview with Women's Health that the Friends star's beauty made her feel nervous when they co-starred in 2011 comedy flick Just Go With It, New York Post reported.

The 25-year-old said that she couldn't help but admire her flawless body during their time together on set.

She asserted that she was a bit awestruck by the 44-year-old's glow and how active she is.

"I was invited to do yoga with her on set but they had so many good yogis I was intimidated and chickened out," she said.

Modelling a tough job: Cara Delevingne

Supermodel Cara Delevingne, who has been in the fashion world for almost three years now, finds walking the ramp difficult.

The 20-year-old has already walked in an impressive 40 catwalk shows across the globe this season but she said that it is not as easy as it appears, reported Interview magazine.

"This modelling thing, it is pretty easy, but actually it is also really tough. I mean, this has been really tough. I think when I started modelling three years ago, it was just a job, and I was so excited, everything was so new, so crazy," Delevingne said.

"I didn't over think anything. I just did it and enjoyed myself along the way. But after a few seasons, you get used to it, and there is a lot you actually have to think about, and, I don't know, it just makes you much more aware of what you look like and what other people think. It is a bit of a nightmare," she added.